Do The Work Pressfield Steven
Do The Work Pressfield Steven
Do The Work Pressfield Steven
Fiction
Killing Rommel
Tides of War
Gates of Fire
Nonfiction
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Do The Work!: Overcome Resistance and get out of your own way / Steven
Pressfield
p. cm.
ISBN 978-1-936719-01-3
DO THE WORK!
Sponsored by GE
A remarkable thing happens when you bring together employees who are
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For Ellie
Contents
Foreword
About This Book
ORIENTATION: ENEMIES AND ALLIES
1 BEGINNING
2 MIDDLE
2 MIDDLE
3 END
Acknowledgments
About The Domino Project
About the Cover
Foreword
Right there, in your driveway, is a really fast car. Not one of those stupid
Hamptons-style, rich-guy, showy cars like a Ferrari, but an honest fast car,
perhaps a Subaru WRX. And here are the keys. Now go drive it.
Right there, on the runway, is a private jet, ready to fly you wherever you
want to go. Here’s the pilot, standing by. Go. Leave.
Right there, in your hand, is a Chicago Pneumatics 0651 hammer. You can
drive a nail through just about anything with it, again and again if you
choose. Time to use it.
That’s what we’re all waiting for you to do—to do the work.
Steven Pressfield is the author of the most important book you’ve never
read: The War of Art . It will help you understand why you’re stuck, it will
kick you in the pants, and it will get you moving. You should, no, you
must buy a copy as soon as you finish reading this.
In this manifesto, Steve gets practical, direct, and personal. Read it fast; then
read it again and take notes. Then buy a copy for everyone else who’s stuck
and push them to get to work as well.
Hurry.
Seth Godin
Hastings-on-Hudson, January 2011
On the field of the Self stand a knight and a dragon.
We’ll hit every predictable Resistance Point along the way—those junctures
where fear, self-sabotage, procrastination, self-doubt, and all those other
demons we’re all so familiar with can be counted upon to strike.
One note: This document is articulated for the most part in the lexicon of a
writer—i.e., the model used is that of conceiving and constructing plays,
novels, or screenplays. But the principles can be applied with equal
effectiveness to any form of creative endeavor, including such seemingly far-
afield enterprises as the acquisition of physical fitness, the recovery from a
broken heart, or the pursuit of any objective—emotional, intellectual, or
spiritual—that involves moving from a lower or less conscious plane to a
higher one.
ORIENTATION
ENEMIES AND ALLIES
Our Enemies
The following is a list of the forces arrayed against us as artists and
entrepreneurs:
2. Rational thought
Resistance
What exactly is this monster? The following few chapters from The War of
Art will bring us up to speed:
10. Any act that entails commitment of the heart—the decision to get
married, to have a child, to weather a rocky patch in a relationship.
Or, expressed another way, any act that derives from our higher nature
instead of our lower. Any of these acts will elicit Resistance.
Resistance Is Insidious
Resistance will tell you anything to keep you from doing your work. It will
perjure, fabricate, falsify; seduce, bully, cajole. Resistance is protean. It will
assume any form, if that’s what it takes to deceive you.
Resistance Is Impersonal
Resistance is not out to get you personally. It doesn’t know who you are
and doesn’t care. Resistance is a force of nature. It acts objectively.
Resistance Is Infallible
Like a magnetized needle floating on a surface of oil, Resistance will
unfailingly point to true North—meaning that calling or action it most wants
to stop us from doing.
Resistance Is Universal
We’re wrong if we think we’re the only ones struggling with Resistance.
Everyone who has a body experiences Resistance.
Its target is the epicenter of our being: our genius, our soul, the unique and
priceless gift we were put on this earth to give and that no one else has but
us. Resistance means business.
Rational Thought
Next to Resistance, rational thought is the artist or entrepreneur’s worst
enemy.
Homer began both The Iliad and The Odyssey with a prayer to the Muse.
The Greeks’ greatest poet understood that genius did not reside within his
fallible, mortal self—but came to him instead from some source that he could
neither command nor control, only invoke.
When an artist says “ Trust the soup,” she means let go of the need to
control (which we can’t do anyway) and put your faith instead in the Source,
the Mystery, the Quantum Soup.
The deeper the source we work from, the better our stuff will be—and the
more transformative it will be for us and for those we share it with.
If you’re reading this book, it’s because you sense inside you a second self,
an unlived you.
With some exceptions (God bless them), friends and family are the enemy of
this unmanifested you, this unborn self, this future being.
Our Allies
Enough for now about the antagonists arrayed against us. Let’s consider the
champions on our side:
1. Stupidity
2. Stubbornness
3. Blind faith
4. Passion
Stay Stupid
The three dumbest guys I can think of: Charles Lindbergh, Steve Jobs,
Winston Churchill. Why? Because any smart person who understood how
impossibly arduous were the tasks they had set themselves would have
pulled the plug before he even began.
Ignorance and arrogance are the artist and entrepreneur’s indispensable allies.
She must be clueless enough to have no idea how difficult her enterprise is
going to be—and cocky enough to believe she can pull it off anyway.
We can always revise and revisit once we’ve acted. But we can accomplish
nothing until we act.
Be Stubborn
Once we commit to action, the worst thing we can do is
to stop.
I like the idea of stubbornness because it’s less lofty than “ tenacity” or
“ perseverance.” We don’t have to be heroes to be stubborn. We can just be
pains in the butt.
When we’re stubborn, there’s no quit in us. We’re mean. We’re mulish.
We’re ornery.
Blind Faith
Is there a spiritual element to creativity? Hell, yes.
Imagine a box with a lid. Hold the box in your hand. Now open it.
What’s inside?
It might be a frog, a silk scarf, a gold coin of Persia. But here’s the trick: no
matter how many times you open the box, there is always something in it.
Passion
Picasso painted with passion, Mozart composed with it. A child plays with
it all day long.
Assistance
We’ll come back to this later. Suffice it to say for now that as Resistance is
the shadow, its opposite—Assistance—is the sun.
But enough theory. In the next chapter we’ll start our novel, kick off our new
business, launch our philanthropic enterprise.
Good things happen when we start before we’re ready. For one thing, we
show huevos. Our blood heats up. Courage begets more courage. The gods,
witnessing our boldness, look on in approval. W. H. Murray said:
A Research Diet
Before we begin, you wanna do research? Uh-unh. I’m putting you on a diet.
(Later we’ll come back and do serious, heavy-duty research. Later. Not now.)
1. Stay Primitive
The creative act is primitive. Its principles are of birth and genesis.
That’s the place we inhabit as artists and innovators. It’s the place we must
become comfortable with.
If you and I want to do great stuff, we can’t let ourselves work small. A
home-run swing that results in a strikeout is better than a successful bunt or
even a line-drive single.
Start playing from power. We can always dial it back later. If we don’t
swing for the seats from the start, we’ll never be able to drive a fastball into
the upper deck.
This is how screenwriters and playwrights work. Act One, Act Two, Act
Three.
2. Wall set below the level of the ground in a “ V,” extending from a
shallow end to a deep end.
At the conception stage, the artist works by instinct. What feels right?
Is this her pure vision? Does it feel so right to her that she can dedicate the
next X years of her life to realizing it?
Those were the only questions, at the start, that Maya Lin needed to ask and
answer.
Did she analyze her design intellectually? No doubt. Did she reflect on the
utility of negative space and the power of what’s-left-out? Of course. Did she
assess with her intellect which aspects of the design would produce emotion
and why? I’m sure she did.
But all that is beside the point at this stage. Let the art historians worry
about that later.
Better to have written a lousy ballet than to have composed no ballet at all.
Your movie, your album, your new startup … what is it about? When you
know that, you’ll know the end state. And when you know the end state,
you’ll know the steps to take to get there.
Knowing our theme (in other words, what Moby Dick is about), we now
know the climax: Ahab harpoons the white whale and duels it to the death.
No other climax is possible.
Next: beginning and middle. We need to set the climax up and load it with
maximum emotion and thematic impact.
Once we have Ishmael, we have our start and our ultimate finish—after the
whale destroys the Pequod and all her crew and drags Ahab to his death in
the depths, Ishmael pops up amid the wreckage, the lone survivor, to tell the
tale.
Let’s pause for a moment then and consider the difference between thinking
and “ thinking.”
I was thirty years old before I had an actual thought. Everything up till then
was either what Buddhists call “ monkey-mind” chatter or the reflexive
regurgitation of whatever my parents or teachers said, or whatever I saw on
the news or read in a book, or heard somebody rap about, hanging around
the street corner.
In this book, when I say “ Don’t think,” what I mean is: don’t listen to the
chatter. Pay no attention to those rambling, disjointed images and notions
that drift across the movie screen of your mind.
Chatter is Resistance.
Its aim is to reconcile you to “ the way it is,” to make you exactly like
everyone else, to render you amenable to societal order and discipline.
Answering that is the work you and I will do for the rest of our lives.
1. Stay primitive.
2. Trust the soup.
3. Swing for the seats.
It can’t.
When you and I set out to create anything—art, commerce, science, love—or
to advance in the direction of a higher, nobler version of ourselves, we
uncork from the universe, ineluctably, an equal and opposite reaction.
Every principle espoused so far in this volume is predicated upon that truth.
The aim of every axiom set forth thus far is to outwit, outflank, outmaneuver
Resistance.
David Lean famously declared that a feature film should have seven or eight
major sequences. That’s a pretty good guideline for our play, our album, our
State of the Union address.
A video game should have seven or eight major movements; so should the
newest high-tech gadget, or the latest fighter plane. Our new house should
have seven or eight major spaces. A football game, a prize fight, a tennis
match—if they’re going to be entertaining—should have seven or eight
major swings of momentum.
That’s what we need now. We need to fill in the gaps with a series of great
entertaining and enlightening scenes, sequences, or spaces.
Do Research Now
Now you can do your research. But stay on your diet.
One trick they use is to boil down their presentation to the following:
3. A killer climax
4. A concise statement of the theme
If we’re inventing Twitter, we start with What Are You Doing Now?, the
140-character limit, and the Following. We fill in the gaps: the hashtag, the
tiny URL, the re-tweet.
If we’re writing The Hangover, we kick off with Losing Doug, Searching for
Doug, Finding Doug. Fill in the blanks: Stu marries a stripper, Mike Tyson
comes after his tiger, Mister Chow brings the muscle.
When we’ve got David Lean’s eight sequences, we’re home except for one
thing:
Get the serum to Nome. Get the Conestoga wagon to the Oregon Trail. Get
the first version of your project done from A to Z as fast as you can.
Set forth without fear and without self-censorship. When you hear that voice
in your head, blow it off.
Only one thing matters in this initial draft: get SOMETHING done, however
flawed or imperfect.
Paul wants to know if he should throttle back. He’s worried that the book
will come out so evil, not even Darth Vader will want to touch it.
Answer: No way.
The darker the better, if that’s how it’s coming to him.
Suspending self-judgment doesn’t just mean blowing off the “ You suck”
voice in our heads. It also means liberating ourselves from conventional
expectations—from what we think our work “ ought” to be or “ should” look
like.
If your notion violates every precept I’ve set forth in these pages, tell me to
go to hell. Do what that voice says.
Wrong.
The Process
Let’s talk about the actual process—the writing/composing/ idea generation
process.
For this first draft, we’ll go light on reflection and heavy on action.
Spew. Let ’er rip. Launch into the void and soar
wherever the wind takes you.
When we say “ Trust the soup,” we mean the Muse, the unconscious, the
Quantum Soup. The sailor hoists his canvas, trusting that the wind (which
is invisible and which he can neither see nor control) will appear and power
him upon his voyage.
Why does this purely instinctive, intuitive method work? Because our idea
(our song, our ballet, our new Tex-Mex restaurant) is smarter than we are.
The song we’re composing already exists in potential. Our work is to find
it. Can we hear it in our head? It exists, like a signal coming from a faraway
radio tower.
Did you read Bob Dylan’s Chronicles? The lengths he goes to to find a
song (or an arrangement or a producing partner) are beyond insanity.
When we think, “ This notion is completely off the wall … should I even
take the time to work on this?”
… the answer is yes.
But behind every law of nature stands an equal and opposite law.
What entities?
Ideas.
You started with a few scraps of a song; now you’ve got half an opera. You
began with the crazy notion to restore a neglected park; now the lot is cleared
and you’ve got volunteers tweeting and phoning at all hours. Your will and
vision initiated the process, but now the process has acquired a life and
momentum of its own.
Keep Working
Stephen King has confessed that he works every day. Fourth of July, his
birthday, Christmas.
For that interval, close the door and—short of a family emergency or the
outbreak of World War III—don’t let ANYBODY in.
Keep working.
Keep working.
Now that we’re rolling, we can start engaging the left brain as well as the
right. Act, then reflect. Act, then reflect.
At least twice a week, I pause in the rush of work and have a meeting with
myself. (If I were part of a team, I’d call a team meeting.)
This is the thorniest nut of any creative endeavor—and the one that evokes
the fiercest Resistance.
More books, movies, new businesses, etc. get screwed up (or rather, screw
themselves up) due to failure to confront and solve this issue than for any
other reason. It is make-or-break, do-or-die.
Have that meeting twice a week. Pause and reflect. “ What is this project
about?” “ What is its theme?” “ Is every element serving that theme?”
What’s missing in the menu of your new restaurant? What have we left out
in planning our youth center in the slums of São Paulo?
Did you ever see the movie True Confessions , starring Robert Duvall and
Robert De Niro? The story is set in 1940s Los Angeles; De Niro is a rising-
star monsignor for the L.A. diocese; Duvall plays his brother, a homicide
detective investigating a Black Dahlia–type murder.
The script was great, the direction was tremendous. But in mid-shoot, De
Niro’s instincts told him something was missing. The audience had seen his
character wheeling and dealing on behalf of the Church, hosting big-money
fundraisers, getting schools built, playing golf with L.A. heavyweights.
De Niro went to Ulu Grosbard, the director, and asked for a scene where the
audience gets to see where his character sleeps. Sounds crazy, doesn’t it?
Ideas are flowing. Our movie, our new business, our passage to freedom from
addiction has acquired gravitational mass; it possesses energy; its field
produces attraction. The law of self-ordering has kicked in. Despite all our
self-doubt, the project is rounding into shape. It’s becoming itself.
People are responding to us differently. We’re making new friends. Our feet
are under us; we’re starting to feel professional. We’re beginning to feel as if
we know a secret that nobody else does. Or rather, that we’ve somehow
become part of a select society. Other members recognize us and encourage
us; unsolicited, they proffer assistance—and their aid, unfailingly, is exactly
what we’ve needed.
Best of all, we’re having fun. The dread that had hamstrung us for years
seems miraculously to have fallen away. The fog has lifted. It’s almost too
good to be true.
And then …
The Wall
And then we hit the wall.
Did we stand up to someone in authority over us? Now we crawl back and
grovel to him. Did we face up to someone who was treating us with
disrespect? Now we beg him without shame to take us back.
We have turned round Cape Horn and the gales are shrieking; ice encases the
masts; sails and sheets are frozen. The storm howls dead in our faces.
There’s no way back and no way forward.
They’re the movie within the movie, the dance within the dance. If you take
away nothing else from this document, take this section.
What follows is what you need to know to get to the other side.
It can’t.
Resistance is not a peripheral opponent. It does not arise from rivals, bosses,
spouses, children, terrorists, lobbyists, or political adversaries.
You can board a spaceship to Pluto and settle, all by yourself, into a perfect
artist’s cottage ten zillion miles from Earth. Resistance will still be with
you.
They are not your “ fault.” You have done nothing “ wrong.” You have
committed no “ sin.” I have that same voice in my head. So did Picasso and
Einstein. So do Sarah Palin and Lady Gaga and Donald Trump.
The enemy is in you, but it is not you. No moral judgment attaches to the
possession of it. You “ have” Resistance the same way you “ have” a
heartbeat.
You are blameless. You retain free will and the capacity to act.
What does this mean to us—the artists and entrepreneurs in the trenches?
Love for the material, love for the work, love for our
brothers and sisters to whom we will offer our work as a
gift.
She’s us, she’s our higher nature, our Self. In the face of Resistance, we have
to remember her and hang onto her and draw strength from her.
All of these characters or forces represent Assistance. They are symbols for
the unmanifested. They stand for a dream.
Sometimes when Resistance is kicking my butt (which it does, all the time),
I flash on Charles Lindbergh. What symphony of Resistance must have been
playing in his head when he was struggling to raise the funding for his
attempt to fly across the Atlantic solo?
How cool would it be, in 1927, to land at Le Bourget field outside Paris,
having flown from New York, solo and non-stop, before anyone else had ever
done it?
The seventh principle of Resistance is that we can align ourselves with these
universal forces of Assistance—this dream, this passion to make the
unmanifest manifest—and ride them into battle against the dragon.
This is Resistance’s first question. The scale below will help you answer.
Mark the selection that corresponds to how you feel about your
book/movie/ballet/new business/whatever.
If your answer is not the one on the far right, put this book down and throw
it away.
2. The money
3. For fame
4. Because I deserve it
5. For power
If you checked 8 or 9, you get to stay on the island. (I know I said there was
only one correct answer. But 8 and 9 are really one.)
If you checked any of the first seven, you can stay, too—but you must
immediately check yourself into the Attitude Adjustment Chamber.
Your impatience
Your fear
Your hope
Your anger
The only items you get to keep are love for the work,
will to finish, and passion to serve the ethical, creative
Muse.
This ends our special section, “ Belly of the Beast.” We return now to
programming already in progress:
Then inevitably …
Everything crashes.
If our project is a movie, the star checks into rehab. If it’s a business venture,
the bank pulls our financing. If it’s a rodeo, our star bull runs away with a
heifer.
The worst part of the Big Crash is that nothing can prepare us for it. Why?
Because the crash arises organically, spawned by some act of commission or
omission that we ourselves took or countenanced back at the project’s
inception.
The Big Crash just happened to me. My newest book, a novel called The
Profession, was done—after two years of work. I was proud of it, I was
psyched, I was sure I had broken through to a level I had never achieved
before.
The worst part is, they were right. The book didn’t work. Its concept was
flawed, and the flaw was fatal.
I’d love to report that I rallied at once and whipped that sucker into shape in
a matter of days. Unfortunately, what happened was that I crashed just like
the book.
In SEAL training, they have a bell. When a candidate can’t take the agony
any longer—the 6-mile ocean swims or the 15-mile full-load runs or the
physical and mental ordeals on no sleep and no food … when he’s had
enough and he’s ready to quit, he walks up and rings the bell.
You and I have a bell hanging over us, too, here in the
belly of the beast. Will we ring it?
There’s a difference between Navy SEAL training and what you and I are
facing now.
We’ve got no trainers over us, shouting in our ears or kicking our butts to
keep us going. We’ve got no friends, no fellow sufferers, no externally
imposed structure. No one’s feeding us, housing us, or clothing us. We have
no objective milestones or points of validation. We can’t tell whether we’re
doing great or falling on our faces. When we finish, if we do, no one will be
waiting to congratulate us. We’ll get no champagne, no beach party, no
diploma, no insignia. The battle we’re fighting, we can’t explain to anybody
or share with anybody or call in anybody to help.
We got ourselves into this mess by mistakes we made at the start. How?
Were we lazy? Inattentive? Did we mean well but forget to factor in human
nature? Did we assess reality incorrectly?
Sartre said “ Hell is other people,” but in this case, hell is us.
Panic Is Good
Creative panic is good. Here’s why:
When we are succeeding—that is, when we have begun to overcome our self-
doubt and self-sabotage, when we are advancing in our craft and evolving to a
higher level—that’s when panic strikes.
It did for me when my book crashed, and it was the best thing that happened
to me all year.
Have you ever watched a small child take a few bold steps away from its
mother? The little boy or girl shows great courage. She ventures forth, feels
exhilaration, and then … she realizes what she has done. She freaks. She
bolts back to Mommy.
Next time, the child won’t run back to Mommy so fast. Next time, she’ll
venture farther.
That’s us as we rally and re-tackle the Big Crash. This time we’ll lick it.
We’ll fix this jalopy and get it back on the road.
Stupidity
Stubbornness
Blind faith
I’m not trying to be cryptic or facetious. We went wrong at the start because
the problem was so hard (and the act of solving it was so painful) that we
ducked and dodged and bypassed. We hoped it would go away. We hoped it
would solve itself. A little voice warned us then, but we were too smart to
listen.
It’s not us. We are not worthless or evil or crazy. We’re just us, facing a
problem.
Scene after scene almost worked. But they all ran onto the same rocks: the
events were so proximate time-wise that they could be doubted and second-
guessed. The reader could say, “ That’s bullshit, I was there and it didn’t
happen like that.” And the events were too emotionally charged (9/11 played
a role and so did fictional withdrawals from Iraq and Afghanistan) and
involved such painful real-world issues (did our troops die in vain?) that
they overwhelmed the basically simple story and pulled it off its politically
speculative-future theme.
Remember what we said before about friends and family? The answer came
from there, from two people very close to me (they know who they are) who
thrashed in and banged around inside the problem. They couldn’t see the full
solution, but the ideas that they stirred up helped me see it.
The answer was to move the book out farther into the future.
It was like saying “ Get the drive-wheel back on the pavement; then the car
will come out of the ditch.” Or “ put the ship-date off one month to give us
time to repair the glitches first.”
And yes, the book did crash a second time after that, requiring a second trip
back to Square One.
We hurry over to HM’s house and read the manuscript. Mel already has
feedback from other friends and colleagues. All agree the book isn’t working.
We ask our Big Question: “ What’s missing?” The consensus focuses on the
captain.
Hmmm. Let’s dig deeper. What does the foolscap say about the theme?
… the clash between human will and the elemental malice of nature.
Melville is freaking a little; he’s too close to the material, he has identified
his hopes with it too much. Plus he’s broke and the rent is due. We’ve
given him a couple of stiff tots of rum; he’s lying down in the bedroom. But
still, the Problem. What exactly is it?
Two things.
First, Ahab as he stands now is weak; he’s not a worthy opponent for the
White Whale. We have to beef him up.
2. Not just any peg leg, but one made of whale ivory.
8. Let Ahab renounce his whaling contract and denounce the for-profit
nature of the voyage. The hell with killing other whales for their
oil! Ahab will hunt Moby Dick for vengeance alone!
These changes are helping. Ahab is much better than he was before, with two
good legs and regular hair. But we need more.
The involvement of the crew! If Ahab is the only crazy person aboard and the
crew meekly follows him, that’s no good. The men must become as
obsessed as their captain.
A new scene. Ahab assembles the crew and forges new harpoons, made not
for other whales but only to kill Moby Dick.
“ Advance, ye mates! Cross your lances full before me. Well done! Let
me touch the axis.” [Ahab pours the full voltage of his own electric
hate, by the medium of his hand, into the lances of his three
harpooneers.] “ Drink, ye harpooneers! drink and swear … Death to
Moby Dick! God hunt us all, if we do not hunt Moby Dick to his
death!”
When we ship, we declare our stuff ready for prime time. We pack it in a
FedEx box and send it out into the world. Our movie hits the screens, our
smart phone arrives in the stores, our musical opens on Broadway.
I had a good friend who had labored for years and had produced an
excellent and deeply personal novel. It was done. He had it in its
mailing box, complete with cover letter to his agent. But he couldn’t
make himself send it off. Fear of rejection unmanned him.
Shipping is not for the squeamish or the faint of heart. It requires killer
instinct. We’ve got the monster down; now we have to drive a stake through
its heart.
When Michael Crichton approached the end of a novel (so I’ve read), he used
to start getting up earlier and earlier in the morning. He was desperate to
keep his mojo going. He’d get up at six, then five, then three-thirty and two-
thirty, till he was driving his wife insane.
Finally he had to move out of the house. He checked into a hotel (the Kona
Village, which ain’t so bad) and worked around the clock till he’d finished
the book.
Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate. Our deepest fear is that
we are powerful beyond measure. It is our light, not our darkness, that
most frightens us. We ask ourselves, Who am I to be brilliant,
gorgeous, talented, fabulous? Actually, who are you not to be? You are
a child of God. Your playing small does not serve the world. There is
nothing enlightened about shrinking so that other people won’t feel
insecure around you. We are all meant to shine, as children do. We
were born to make manifest the glory of God that is within us. It’s not
just in some of us; it’s in everyone. And as we let our own light shine,
we unconsciously give other people permission to do the same. As we
are liberated from our own fear, our presence automatically liberates
others.
What makes us laugh, I suspect, is that all of us feel the pull to pick
BOOKS ABOUT HEAVEN.
Are we that timid? Are our huevos that pocito?
When we’re offered a chance at heaven, what diabolically craven force makes
us want to back off—just for now, we promise ourselves—and choose instead
heaven’s pale reflection?
It’s silent, covert, invisible … but it permeates every aspect of our lives and
poisons them in ways we’re either blind to or in denial about.
Exposure
In mountaineering, there’s a technical term called “ exposure.” A climber is
exposed when there is nothing but thin air beneath her.
She can be a hundred feet from the summit of Everest and not be exposed, if
there’s a ledge or a shelf below. Conversely, she can be in shorts and a tank
top down at the beach, practice-climbing on a boulder ten feet tall, and be
completely exposed—if there’s a fall beneath her.
That’s why we’re so afraid of it. When we ship, we’ll be judged. The real
world will pronounce upon our work and upon us. When we ship, we can
fail. When we ship, we can be humiliated.
Here’s another true story:
The first professional writing job I ever had, after seventeen years of trying,
was on a movie called King Kong Lives. I and my partner-at-the-time, Ron
Shusett (a brilliant writer and producer who also did Alien and Total Recall),
hammered out the screenplay for Dino De Laurentiis. We were certain it was
going to be a blockbuster. We invited everyone we knew to the premiere; we
even rented out the joint next door for a post-triumph blowout.
Nobody showed. There was only one guy in line beside our guests, and he
was muttering something about spare change. In the theater, our friends
endured the movie in mute stupefaction. When the lights came up, they fled
like cockroaches into the night.
When the first week’s grosses came in, the flick barely registered. Still I
clung to hope. Maybe it’s only tanking in urban areas; maybe it’s playing
better in the ’burbs. I motored to an Edge City multiplex. A youth manned
the popcorn booth. “ How’s King Kong Lives?” I asked. He flashed thumbs-
down. “ Miss it, man. It sucks.”
I was crushed.
Ship it.
At that time, I had no idea there was such a thing as Resistance. I believed
the voices in my head. I acted out. I blew up my marriage and blew up my
life, rather than plunge a sword into the heart of that book and ship it.
It took me seven more years before I found the courage to face that dragon
again—and another ten years after that before I had finally learned how to lay
him out.
Here’s one thing I can tell you—and you can take this to the bank:
Yeah, he’ll still be there. Yeah, you’ll still have to duel him every morning.
And yeah, he’ll still fight just as hard and use just as many nasty tricks as
he ever did.
But you will have beaten him once, and you’ll know
you can beat him again. That’s a game-changer. That will
transform your life.
From the day I finally finished something, I’ve never had trouble finishing
anything again.
Be Careful
Just because you’ve shipped doesn’t mean Resistance is finished. Like the
Terminator, it’s morphing into an even crueler and more diabolical form.
It’ll be back.
This is a topic for another book: the level of maturity, professionalism, and
personal involvement demanded by the tectonic overthrows happening today
in positioning, branding, marketing—not to mention pure art and soul-
authenticity. But that’s for the future.
Kudos to you!
I salute anybody who took this vessel to sea and brought her safely again
into port.
I tip my hat to you for what you’ve done—for losing forty pounds, for
kicking crack cocaine, for surviving the loss of someone you love, for facing
any kind of adversity—internal or external—and slogging through. I come to
attention when you walk past. I stand up for you like the spectators in the
gallery stood up for Atticus Finch in To Kill A Mockingbird.
By dint of your efforts and your perseverance, you have initiated yourself into
an invisible freemasonry whose members are awarded no badges or insignia,
share no secret handshake, and wear no funny-looking hats.
I don’t care if you fail with this project. I don’t care if you fail a thousand
times.
You have done what only mothers and gods do: you
have created new life.
Take the rest of the day off. Take your wife or husband out to dinner. Pop
some champagne. Give yourself a standing ovation.
Stay stupid.
Thanks to Seth, Ishita, Willie, and Michael for being the brains behind this
project. Thanks to Shawn and Callie for being my comrades in the trenches.
Thanks to Amazon for supplying the muscle.
And thanks to you who’ve read this, for taking yourself (and us) forward.
About The Domino Project
Books worth buying are books worth sharing. We hope you’ll find someone
to give this copy to. You can find more about what we’re up to at
www.thedominoproject.com.
Here are three ways you can spread the ideas in this manifesto:
1. Hold a discussion group in your office. Get people to read the book
and come in and argue about it. How open is your company to
innovation and failure? What will you do if your competitors get
better at it than you are?
2. Give away copies. Lots of them. It turns out that when everyone in
a group reads the same thing, conversations go differently.
3. Write the names of some of your peers on the inside back cover of
this book (or scrawl them on a Post-it on your Kindle). As each
person reads the book, have them scratch off their name and add
someone else’s.
In 1885, Vincent Van Gogh created this cover drawing, Man with Hoe, as a
part of his life-long pursuit “ to give happiness by creating beauty.” We at
The Domino Project were drawn to this image because it represents the quiet
strength of a person who actually does the work, regardless of glamour or
crowds or the resistance. The drawing is also a reminder that there’s an artist
within each of us, and we must encourage that artist to do the work, to make
something that matters, regardless of anything else that is going on.